62
62
Aug 7, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
the other is united states of america. when you mentioned the deputy secretary of defense during three years ago, the most important line in the article was the deputy secretary of defense. a seminal american article on cyberthinking. not by the office of science policy in the white house, not by the u.s. trade representative. not by anyone except the deputy secretary of defense. i am catholic by tradition. so bless me, father, i have sinned. we could be accused of nudging the militarization of cyberspace in that direction. by the way we have talked about it as a nation and we have organized ourselves as a nation. you talk about the earth's atmosphere, air dominance, cyberdominance, on command. that is how we talk about it. so i get it. i have no views on who may or may not have conducted this. but i have been very public with my views as to that being a big deal. were i understand the difference and destruction is dramatic. but someone just use a new weapon in this weapon will not be put back in the box. i get all of that
the other is united states of america. when you mentioned the deputy secretary of defense during three years ago, the most important line in the article was the deputy secretary of defense. a seminal american article on cyberthinking. not by the office of science policy in the white house, not by the u.s. trade representative. not by anyone except the deputy secretary of defense. i am catholic by tradition. so bless me, father, i have sinned. we could be accused of nudging the militarization of...
61
61
Aug 2, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
the basic question where faced with, do you need to collect five years on data in everyone in america and their telephone records, so the hay stack, which is pretty big -- >> that's a fair question. the question would be is it enough to look prosphectively in the future -- >> right. >> it may be the plotting you're looking for occurred in the past. it if you don't have that person's record in the past you can't determine ? >> if we required the phone companies to retain the records for five years. -- >> that's a good point. it's not possible. >> it did [inaudible] retain it for the benefit of the government. >> how would it be? >> i think it would require a legal change. i don't think it's hard. i don't think you can get there from here. you have to think about the rest of the attribute necessary to make it a useful adventure. >> senator feinstein said ask him about the offense. >> i would say in a classified session i can give you chapter and verse on the expense. it's dpircht whether you choose the implementation or leave it with the provide piers. they should bear the expense. >> t
the basic question where faced with, do you need to collect five years on data in everyone in america and their telephone records, so the hay stack, which is pretty big -- >> that's a fair question. the question would be is it enough to look prosphectively in the future -- >> right. >> it may be the plotting you're looking for occurred in the past. it if you don't have that person's record in the past you can't determine ? >> if we required the phone companies to retain...
69
69
Aug 4, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
many more protests i hope there will be in the held at 800 cities in every city in america. people can now and said no. we will not tolerate this house we will oppose you with every ounce of this totalitarian measure. with david do is say yes. you are right. with david hold a hearing in they would introduce bills out of recognition along the way. then they would come forward with their reform that is the nature of the great popular pressure. i would hope that people would understand what we need in this case is not reform but we need to tear these things apart brick by brick and let people know that we will never trust again positions of power if we tolerate this to me will be treated that way we tolerated it this long with the excuses and the blown out of proportion with lies and lies. and we forgive them somehow. that is very dangerous. i'll dig this is an issue that is negotiable because this portends under totalitarianism of they know everything about you then very few people can be blackmailed and even if you are not blackmailed by virtue they will threaten family membe
many more protests i hope there will be in the held at 800 cities in every city in america. people can now and said no. we will not tolerate this house we will oppose you with every ounce of this totalitarian measure. with david do is say yes. you are right. with david hold a hearing in they would introduce bills out of recognition along the way. then they would come forward with their reform that is the nature of the great popular pressure. i would hope that people would understand what we...
49
49
Aug 2, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
they are trying to strike america. what we need is all these tools, so you mentioned the value of 702 # versus the value of business records 215. they are different. i make the analogy like a baseball team. you have your most valuable player, but you have players who hit singles every day. >> mr. joyce -- >> i just want to relate to the homeland plots. in the plot to bomb the new york subway system, business record 215 played a role. it identifies specifically a number we did not previously know -- >> it was a critical role? >> what i'm saying is what it plays -- >> undercover work that took place in there? >> yes, there was some undercover work, but what i'm saying is that each tool plays a different role, mr. chairman. i'm not saying that it is the moes important tool. >> wasn't the fbi already aware of the individual in contact? >> yes, we were, but not of that specific telephone number nsa provided us. >> the only reason i go down this, i, you know, we did everything, for example, if we could have security, strip s
they are trying to strike america. what we need is all these tools, so you mentioned the value of 702 # versus the value of business records 215. they are different. i make the analogy like a baseball team. you have your most valuable player, but you have players who hit singles every day. >> mr. joyce -- >> i just want to relate to the homeland plots. in the plot to bomb the new york subway system, business record 215 played a role. it identifies specifically a number we did not...
91
91
Aug 3, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
the most dangerous thing in america is an empty hospital bed. and empty cat scanner, it is a cardiologist with an empty slots. that is a capacity bubble problem. we have created enormous capacity that is a bubble. 18% of the economy is home care, a 11% is housing and 7% is fine and. what we have done is create an enormous health care bubble that has to talk at some time. there is a historic analogue to this, at some point a quarter of state budgets were psychiatric hospitals and your predecessors decided to pull the plug on this and we popped the psychiatric hospital bubble and spent 30 years cleaning up the mess after words. we have to be institutionalized health care and have transitional money to do this. i would say to your hospital's ready, set, go, merge and consolidate because they won't make it as a tiny little hospitals. the next thing i would do is move toward global budgets as fast as possible because their economic model is the same as the hotel industry and the airline industry which is people in bed, volume based game. every day th
the most dangerous thing in america is an empty hospital bed. and empty cat scanner, it is a cardiologist with an empty slots. that is a capacity bubble problem. we have created enormous capacity that is a bubble. 18% of the economy is home care, a 11% is housing and 7% is fine and. what we have done is create an enormous health care bubble that has to talk at some time. there is a historic analogue to this, at some point a quarter of state budgets were psychiatric hospitals and your...
193
193
Aug 11, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 193
favorite 0
quote 0
not do for freddie joe gave but mine said christopher went to the number one public high-school in america is one years old the gershwin brothers with there and when they built battery park city and added that to lower manhattan, the quid pro quo was to build a new campus incredible. the olympics sized pool and a broadway stage and orchestra. not a brilliant. 28,000 applicants per year and only about six -- 681 dash 800 students get it and the second day of high school is 9/11 and i was in california. he cannot get from the phone his mother working as it abc news and she jumps on the subway he and cannot get through flip being out to then get on the bus to go back up down and only the do york story they stopped the bus at 34 streak there is a rule that you cannot let people off the bus between stops but they kicked the window out so down she gets on another bus and christopher is on the bus with a bunch of his friends. then they go home. we actually did a little piece that night then i found out of it incredible fire marshal died that day and i met him in 1997 i had written the book that i
not do for freddie joe gave but mine said christopher went to the number one public high-school in america is one years old the gershwin brothers with there and when they built battery park city and added that to lower manhattan, the quid pro quo was to build a new campus incredible. the olympics sized pool and a broadway stage and orchestra. not a brilliant. 28,000 applicants per year and only about six -- 681 dash 800 students get it and the second day of high school is 9/11 and i was in...
103
103
Aug 8, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
thank you and god bless america. >> i think we go we go inside ? >> we have a signing station set in the air conditioning. >> it's in air conditioning. >> those of us in wool are looking forward to the air conditioning. >> you do that. you're the boss. i'm just the passenger. college is nice, isn't it? >> we will take a moment and get ourselves oriented. we are leaving downtown gettysburg. the train will be moving in a westerly direction. >> does this train go parallel to the route that he came down or hill came down? i think so. you may want to get on and explain that at some point or have bill do it. you do have a narration? you may want to have somebody actually do the narration if that makes sense. >> it was just over that hill where the fighting took place very early in the morning july 1, 1863. >> i think either you or bill should give the narration. bill knows vastly more about the details than i do. but it's your train. i will say something general. >> walk through the park. hi, how are you? good. aren't you wa-good. aren't you warm? >> ver
thank you and god bless america. >> i think we go we go inside ? >> we have a signing station set in the air conditioning. >> it's in air conditioning. >> those of us in wool are looking forward to the air conditioning. >> you do that. you're the boss. i'm just the passenger. college is nice, isn't it? >> we will take a moment and get ourselves oriented. we are leaving downtown gettysburg. the train will be moving in a westerly direction. >> does this...
184
184
Aug 25, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 184
favorite 0
quote 0
i love america and i love the fbi. i think it's a great education and the only way it's going improve is by looking what the faults were and correcting them. it's true of any institution. i keep writing these weaks and say, you know, just that's because what i want to do rewrite history to the degree it's possible. i don't know if that answered your question. anybody else, please. this lady any the front. >> have you ever personally been threatened or sent any kind of threat to your life or ex-- for exposing some of this? >> i wasn't physically -- well, i had a couple of death threat on the website. but, you know, i was patrick fitzgerald of the very powerful u.s. attorney i talked about who was the head of organized crime and terrorism in the southern district spent 20 months from the fall of '07 to the summer of '09 trying to kill my last book. literally, lirmly threatened 32 pages of letter threating to sue for liable. didn't have a prayer and a case and he knew. he's a brilliant attorney. my books were, you know, t
i love america and i love the fbi. i think it's a great education and the only way it's going improve is by looking what the faults were and correcting them. it's true of any institution. i keep writing these weaks and say, you know, just that's because what i want to do rewrite history to the degree it's possible. i don't know if that answered your question. anybody else, please. this lady any the front. >> have you ever personally been threatened or sent any kind of threat to your life...
74
74
Aug 24, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
and to some degree, that's america today. that's our--our race--our race relations are--we go to louis farrakhan and give him a great deal more media time and attention than we do to thomas sowell or shelby steele, or any number of--of other--of other people. that's the--those are the ones who control the--the moral authority of the larger society, and keep--keep us in this sort of--frozen in this way. c-span: you write about a column written by cokie and steve roberts about j.c. watts. what's the point? >> guest: the point was that they wrote a--they wrote a column and--and they--where they sort of--after, you know--gave him a kind of backhanded compliment and where--i---the--where--i forget, i think it had to do with the republican convention and j.c. watts was giving a speech and he made the point that he had come up--his father had--had inspired him and how he'd overcome great obstacles and so forth. and they sort of used colin powell to--to sort of, i guess, wi--give a kind of black--backhanded slap to j.c. watts by sayi
and to some degree, that's america today. that's our--our race--our race relations are--we go to louis farrakhan and give him a great deal more media time and attention than we do to thomas sowell or shelby steele, or any number of--of other--of other people. that's the--those are the ones who control the--the moral authority of the larger society, and keep--keep us in this sort of--frozen in this way. c-span: you write about a column written by cokie and steve roberts about j.c. watts. what's...
85
85
Aug 7, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
it is not just america's interests. obviously snowden is somebody that should be returned to america and given a fair trial. but there are so many other interests on the table. from nuclear proliferation. terrorism, what is going on in syria right now. this necessitates america acting single-handedly, but acting community of countries to give a call to the consciousness of the globe. begin to human rights and begin to push against nuclear proliferation, not urgency facing america but all the democracy in the globe, pushing against real threat of terrorism. >> thank you, mayor. congressman holt. rebuttal to or expansion. holt: the, i'm sorry. i thought we had been through that. i guess this was a repeat question. >> it's your chance to rebut or expand. holt: thank you. as i was saying i would agree with the mayor that there are many things that we need to work with the soviet union on and we should not throw away the relationship on the basis of this snowden, the snowden affair. >> all right. ladies and gentlemen, we'll
it is not just america's interests. obviously snowden is somebody that should be returned to america and given a fair trial. but there are so many other interests on the table. from nuclear proliferation. terrorism, what is going on in syria right now. this necessitates america acting single-handedly, but acting community of countries to give a call to the consciousness of the globe. begin to human rights and begin to push against nuclear proliferation, not urgency facing america but all the...
77
77
Aug 8, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
i think that's what keeps america free. is that individual citizens are passionate about that and that they are serious about that. at the same time you've got to see the abuses, you've got to know where they are, and i don't think that we've lost our freedom and the united states of america. we are having this discussion in this room on c-span. you know, it's still a pretty remarkable country. it's not china. it's not russia. it's not some third world dictatorship. its institutions. you mention if i recall the fbi case, and they lost that case in court. [inaudible] >> it's on the tip of the lost the initial round. and we'll see what happens. if they do that anything congress will probably intervene and pass a law to that effect. because nobody likes that warned. >> [inaudible] applaud the. >> well, the attorney general is under contempt of course. >> sadly we didn't win the presidential election we don't get to appoint the attorney general. [inaudible] >> i'm sorry? >> [inaudible] >> we had a lot of republican candidates r
i think that's what keeps america free. is that individual citizens are passionate about that and that they are serious about that. at the same time you've got to see the abuses, you've got to know where they are, and i don't think that we've lost our freedom and the united states of america. we are having this discussion in this room on c-span. you know, it's still a pretty remarkable country. it's not china. it's not russia. it's not some third world dictatorship. its institutions. you...
66
66
Aug 13, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
she's president and ceo of america's health insurance plan which is the trade association for america's health insurance plans. she's been working for the plans for -- i can't believe this twenty years or so. before that, she directed the work on employee benefits. she was on the professional staff of what is now the senate health committee, karen is here to it share a bit what her members are encountering as they prepare for the full scale implementation of the major aca provision including exchanges. both the federally facilitated exchange and the state base exchange over the coming months or weeks as the case may be. karen, thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you, ed. good afternoon, everyone. it's terrific to participate on this wonderful panel, and i look forward to questions as well. i have four slides after this one. what i true to is anticipate the great information that would be imparted already. i knew i have batting clean up here. i thought i would do is give you a birds' eye perspective from the through the prism of the health plan community. what are we addressing
she's president and ceo of america's health insurance plan which is the trade association for america's health insurance plans. she's been working for the plans for -- i can't believe this twenty years or so. before that, she directed the work on employee benefits. she was on the professional staff of what is now the senate health committee, karen is here to it share a bit what her members are encountering as they prepare for the full scale implementation of the major aca provision including...
88
88
Aug 8, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
this is one of those important public undertaking and the last twenty five years in america. you don't have a right to private if you are taking part in that. what about the iraqi citizen? where does -- and so, you know, we were constantly fighting back against it. >> quite frankly, a lot of men and women want war to be depicted as what it is. >> we got all the time. they would say it's bull shit. and different photographers say it in the book. i don't want to make it sound like the u.s. military is monolithic. there are different unit and people involved. a lot of are smart are progressive, and especially a lot of young captains against the young captains they were poets. one guy had a rock band in berlin before he enlisted. another guy was a professional surfer. you would run against the young captain and lieutenant. they said we want the american people to see what is going on. they tell a story about going from unit to unit and some units are saying you can't take a picture. i continue -- don't want to see a hangnail. she would leave and go to another unit and the guy wou
this is one of those important public undertaking and the last twenty five years in america. you don't have a right to private if you are taking part in that. what about the iraqi citizen? where does -- and so, you know, we were constantly fighting back against it. >> quite frankly, a lot of men and women want war to be depicted as what it is. >> we got all the time. they would say it's bull shit. and different photographers say it in the book. i don't want to make it sound like the...
102
102
Aug 24, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
but if you say, so how are recovering the state of the immigrants in america today, i would say that we are covering the politics of it very well. we sort of know what's going on in the senate subcommittee of the judiciary committee, but do we know what's going on in their lives? are we living with them and telling their stories? and the answer is no. and i think that sort of a national problem and it's not just down here. who but we don't see reporters in the field. without a proper driver's license. and we don't see them, somebody texting their parents can be careful, i got caught on a traffic violation. they may be coming after you. we don't see that. i think we will. i'm hopeful we'll get back to that, that i think online has multiple opportunities for deep reporting. and i look forward to it, kissing more that. >> one of the problems, who's interested in reading about poor people? i mean, it's one thing to read about poor people as they report in 1936, but i know of a project in washington that is trying to cultivate reporters for reporting the social crisis right now that's env
but if you say, so how are recovering the state of the immigrants in america today, i would say that we are covering the politics of it very well. we sort of know what's going on in the senate subcommittee of the judiciary committee, but do we know what's going on in their lives? are we living with them and telling their stories? and the answer is no. and i think that sort of a national problem and it's not just down here. who but we don't see reporters in the field. without a proper driver's...
71
71
Aug 21, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
we are america. this coming started we have to come together again because, well, substitute the tea party, the brothers, goldman sachs, corporations for the sheriffs and the policemen in the south. look what they're doing to america today. that's why we have to get together again. voting rights is under attack. we have the "stand your ground." whose ground? the regreggives, i like that word and the racists want us to believe it's their ground. but it's not. it's everybody's ground. what they want is to legalize the right to shoot somebody and kill somebody because their skin color might be, to them, suspicious. [inaudible] we used to call that lynching. the "stand your ground" laws are new pro-lynch laws. why is all of this happening? i believe it's happening because the corporations, the people that are running the businesses today want to treat workers however they want to and pay them whatever they can get away with. workers today have fewer rights than they had when the march on washington took
we are america. this coming started we have to come together again because, well, substitute the tea party, the brothers, goldman sachs, corporations for the sheriffs and the policemen in the south. look what they're doing to america today. that's why we have to get together again. voting rights is under attack. we have the "stand your ground." whose ground? the regreggives, i like that word and the racists want us to believe it's their ground. but it's not. it's everybody's ground....
103
103
Aug 12, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
and i just hate this idea that we're going to kind of wall off america from central america. because as you said, immigration of these economies in such a positive thing. [applause] spent i'm glad some of you agree with it. nobody in washington -- >> may i had a point? because i feel the same way state does. ideas can't be as a reverent sdk and. but i admire so much a plainspoken truth. i had an opportunity to speak to the president, president obama writes be did he is not the president here. >> right as he was departing to mexico. and, of course, we talked about immigration reform, and i of course wanted to talk about it from an economic perspective. that was fantastic. so i said, the reality of it is you wouldn't be mr. president if it were not for the hispanic vote. never in history of this country has the hispanic community played such a critical role in electing an american president. perhaps more interesting, never again will the be an american president without quoting hispanic vote. but the reality of it is that as leader of the nation, i implore you to please begin t
and i just hate this idea that we're going to kind of wall off america from central america. because as you said, immigration of these economies in such a positive thing. [applause] spent i'm glad some of you agree with it. nobody in washington -- >> may i had a point? because i feel the same way state does. ideas can't be as a reverent sdk and. but i admire so much a plainspoken truth. i had an opportunity to speak to the president, president obama writes be did he is not the president...
99
99
Aug 19, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
we don't want, you know, we don't want to live in an america from the minute you walk out the front door until you get home at night you have wonder if there's an invisible eye in the sky tracking your every move. it might seem a aways away from where we are now especially with the regulatory environment because of safety concerns held back that kind of deployment. those issues will get worked out, and there is a lot of demand pent up demand by police around the country and other agencies to use the technology. we have police helicopters, police helicopters are expensive, they require maintenance crews, they cost millions of dollars. there's a built in natural restraint how much aerial surveillance those are used for. it when we look at the future where the small compld deploy hufns of small cheap inexpensive robotic flying video cameras, we are going to see police agencies in the country, we have seen some express an desire to do so want to put them in up over the neighborhood and track everybody all the time. we need put in place good -- to establish the rule of the game and what we as
we don't want, you know, we don't want to live in an america from the minute you walk out the front door until you get home at night you have wonder if there's an invisible eye in the sky tracking your every move. it might seem a aways away from where we are now especially with the regulatory environment because of safety concerns held back that kind of deployment. those issues will get worked out, and there is a lot of demand pent up demand by police around the country and other agencies to...
99
99
Aug 30, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
i don't think that's america. so schools can raise prices to capture students who can pay full price. the very top tier schools harvard princeton and yale are going to have a huge amount of demand for people want to go to so they can jack up the prices as much as they wanted people are going to pay that because that brand is synonymous with achievement in american life. and what has happened is a lot of second-tier schools have followed suit and they also have raised their tuition troops over at levels that most people can't pay. i think not to make the school the whipping boy of the george washington university is one school that is kind of the exemplary of this. it's the most expensive school in the country that but nobody would say it's of the highest quality. like, i think it's capitalizing on the belief that price is anonymous with quality so with your apparent our student who really may be as uninformed about the college process or in formed nec that, there is going to be a great shot at high-level achieveme
i don't think that's america. so schools can raise prices to capture students who can pay full price. the very top tier schools harvard princeton and yale are going to have a huge amount of demand for people want to go to so they can jack up the prices as much as they wanted people are going to pay that because that brand is synonymous with achievement in american life. and what has happened is a lot of second-tier schools have followed suit and they also have raised their tuition troops over...
171
171
Aug 3, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
we have too many hospital beds in america. we have a bubble in hospital technology, we have to help the industry make a shift. there had to have ban moment in block buster video when a executive said people starting to rent video online. you can imagine the leadership saying no, no, we have internal datahwing thatthican public every friday night spends 1 hour and 15 minutes in our store. you remember that? the story of america is that capitalism creates and destroys and that industries become obsolete. hospital beds are becoming obsolete. we don't need all the hospital beds we have. we have, you know, many of you are using your bonding authority to support and back up those underwrite the bonds. you are doing ribbon cutting for the facilities. every single crane that goes up. every ribbon cutting do you is an invisible tax on the employee benefit program. it's an invisible tax on every employee in the state. we have too much of this. i want to make a couple of suggestions to you that i believe this is all shifting to the state
we have too many hospital beds in america. we have a bubble in hospital technology, we have to help the industry make a shift. there had to have ban moment in block buster video when a executive said people starting to rent video online. you can imagine the leadership saying no, no, we have internal datahwing thatthican public every friday night spends 1 hour and 15 minutes in our store. you remember that? the story of america is that capitalism creates and destroys and that industries become...
102
102
Aug 9, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
i think that's what keeps america free. is that individual citizens are passionate about that and their series about that. at the same time you've got to see the abuses, you've got to know where they are. and i don't think that communism we lost our freedom. if we had we wouldn't be having this discussion in the shim on c-span. you know, is still a pretty remarkable country. it's not china. it's not russia. it's not some third world dictatorship. its institutions -- you mention effort called the fbi case, and they lost that case. [inaudible] >> it's on the tip of the lost the initial round. we will see what happens. i think congress will probably editing and pass a law to that effect. because nobody likes that without a warrant. [inaudible] >> the attorney general is under contempt of course. [applause] sadly we didn't win the presidential election but we don't get to appoint the attorney general. [inaudible] >> i'm sorry? [inaudible] >> we have a lot republican candidates running. but anyway, yes or. >> let them get a mic
i think that's what keeps america free. is that individual citizens are passionate about that and their series about that. at the same time you've got to see the abuses, you've got to know where they are. and i don't think that communism we lost our freedom. if we had we wouldn't be having this discussion in the shim on c-span. you know, is still a pretty remarkable country. it's not china. it's not russia. it's not some third world dictatorship. its institutions -- you mention effort called...
121
121
Aug 15, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
america takes these people from a around the world, educates them in the best universities in america and then takes them out to go to other countries to start companies that compete with us taking jobs away. are you with me? am i missing something? okay. [applause] we are completely in agreement but i would add to the point which is absolutely valid that it is not only about people in the sectors. it's also about those growers in the central valley in california and the construction companies in upstate new york i know we call them on a skilled labour but there is a lot of skill -- >> you know what we call them? we call them customers. [laughter] >> america is growing and with growth comes revenue growth. the of the internet need for spending in all of the programs and more customers, more taxpayers. what am i missing? >> the reason is because it is a tremendous fear they are coming to take our jobs. >> they are creating jobs. and by the way, the economic data support my position, the moral position support my position. it's consistent with america's historic strength in the immigran
america takes these people from a around the world, educates them in the best universities in america and then takes them out to go to other countries to start companies that compete with us taking jobs away. are you with me? am i missing something? okay. [applause] we are completely in agreement but i would add to the point which is absolutely valid that it is not only about people in the sectors. it's also about those growers in the central valley in california and the construction companies...
74
74
Aug 19, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
if america takes its eye, if america takes its eyes off the middle east, then there will be a resurgence of al-qaeda and all its affiliates and more menacing than ever we have seen. our concerns with the consequences of terrorists have, that having terrorists next door shape our views about syria. for americans, syria is more than 5,000 miles away. for us, syria is right on our doorstep. our border with syria is long and, therefore, we are deeply concerned about the ability of terrorists to use and to cross these borders. and just that is why we are participating in the surge of a political solution in syria that will reduce the violence and diminish the rule of the extremists. it's not easy, these political solutions, as we see the balance of forces moving this way and another. but that is one of the viable options for the people of syria. and only the syrian people can decide and determine their future. iraq was at the table during geneva i talks and, in fact, the final communique that was produced by the meeting had strong iraqi input in even the language that was adopted by all the p
if america takes its eye, if america takes its eyes off the middle east, then there will be a resurgence of al-qaeda and all its affiliates and more menacing than ever we have seen. our concerns with the consequences of terrorists have, that having terrorists next door shape our views about syria. for americans, syria is more than 5,000 miles away. for us, syria is right on our doorstep. our border with syria is long and, therefore, we are deeply concerned about the ability of terrorists to use...
84
84
Aug 20, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
but in america there's a big gap. we need more women in office. >> men hold 82% of the seats in the house of representatives. a decade ago, our nation ranked ninth 57 nations as a percentage of women in congress. today we are 92nd. out of 50 governors come just five are women. that's 10%, the same percentage as the number of women mayors in the 100 largest cities. out of more than 7000 state legislators, fewer than one in four are women. that's barely higher than it was two decades ago. at this rate women will be underrepresented in the united states for another 500 years. a century ago in 1920, the decades long struggle for women to win the righ right to vocal e in the 19th amendment to the constitution. inspired by that struggle, representation 2020 takes on this centrist challenge for women. we must have parity for women in office. that will happen when any given election a woman is just as likely as a man to win and in any given legislature, women will be just likely told them. i founded the white house project wh
but in america there's a big gap. we need more women in office. >> men hold 82% of the seats in the house of representatives. a decade ago, our nation ranked ninth 57 nations as a percentage of women in congress. today we are 92nd. out of 50 governors come just five are women. that's 10%, the same percentage as the number of women mayors in the 100 largest cities. out of more than 7000 state legislators, fewer than one in four are women. that's barely higher than it was two decades ago....
57
57
Aug 5, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
that's america's story. there is something in our dna about these immigrants who had the courage to get up and come here, really to fight against great odds to succeed here. and that's what they did. that's who we are today. we should celebrate it, we shouldn't apologize for it. we ought to build on it to make an even stronger nation in this country. thanks, tom. [applause] >> oh, thank you, dick. thank you. [applause] thank you, dick. well, dick, thank you very much for that, and thank you for your great leadership. folks, i want to reassure senator durbin and anyone else who may be tuned in on this that we iowans, we iowans are a welcoming people. we are a compassionate and caring people. [applause] we do not -- [applause] we do not believe in characterizing people with hateful, spiteful, degrading language. we believe that every human being has worth, and we believe those who want to come here to work, to build a better life are not criminals. they are people who want to build a better life for themselves
that's america's story. there is something in our dna about these immigrants who had the courage to get up and come here, really to fight against great odds to succeed here. and that's what they did. that's who we are today. we should celebrate it, we shouldn't apologize for it. we ought to build on it to make an even stronger nation in this country. thanks, tom. [applause] >> oh, thank you, dick. thank you. [applause] thank you, dick. well, dick, thank you very much for that, and thank...
118
118
Aug 29, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
, segregated america. you spoke of old, nasty, bigoted, racist whites, their look of hatred towards you and other blacks. the culture, you said, was to kill a black person if they made a misstep. and i'm wondering picking up this theme we've already herald, did you feel the march would accomplish very much? >> i felt the march really was an important show of the determination of black america for something better, something -- a new way, a new -- a change that had to come. and i think one of the reasons that people were so, it was such a, i thought, quiet, focused crowd, you know? it wasn't, it wasn't a lot of noise and chatter, you know? people were, people were -- >> focused on the speakers. >> on the speeches, on the purpose. if so i really felt that this march -- especially in the chain of events of 1963 even as it happened -- was crucial and was going to lead to something important. >> good. gwen ifill, if i'm not mistaken, you were a little girl living up north in relative security -- >> buffalo, new
, segregated america. you spoke of old, nasty, bigoted, racist whites, their look of hatred towards you and other blacks. the culture, you said, was to kill a black person if they made a misstep. and i'm wondering picking up this theme we've already herald, did you feel the march would accomplish very much? >> i felt the march really was an important show of the determination of black america for something better, something -- a new way, a new -- a change that had to come. and i think one...
223
223
Aug 12, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 223
favorite 0
quote 2
and in america it's about one in eight. if you look here in dallas county where we're seated now, it's about one in four. so really, i think, we couldn't be at a much better place in america to have this discussion right now. and i'm joined by a fabulous panel of experts both on texas and nationally, and they're going to enlighten us and sort of unpack this relationship between growth and immigration here in texas. so i'll start with steve moore. many of you have probably seen him on tv, he's an editorial board member of "the wall street journal." he writes about immigration, taxes, fiscal policy and many things. i'm sure you've read his articles, you've seen him. he's been an advocate for years and a scholar on immigration even before he was at "the wall street journal" and we're just very privileged to have you here, steve, so thank you for coming. >> thank you, matt. >> something that you do well is you look state by state a lot. you do things we like here. you talk about growth and you look at the states and the evidenc
and in america it's about one in eight. if you look here in dallas county where we're seated now, it's about one in four. so really, i think, we couldn't be at a much better place in america to have this discussion right now. and i'm joined by a fabulous panel of experts both on texas and nationally, and they're going to enlighten us and sort of unpack this relationship between growth and immigration here in texas. so i'll start with steve moore. many of you have probably seen him on tv, he's...
62
62
Aug 30, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
that's a america's story. there is something in our dna about these immigrants who have the courage to get up and come here. really to fight against great odds, to succeed you. and thank goodness they did. that's who we are today, and we should celebrate it. we shouldn't apologize for. we had to build on it to make us an even stronger nation into century. thanks, tom your. [applause] >> thank you, dick. thank you. dick, thank you very much for that, and thank you for your great leadership. folks, i want to reassure senator durbin, and anyone else who may be tuned in on this, that we iowans, we are a welcoming people. we are a compassionate and caring people. [applause] >> we do not believe in characterizing people with hateful, spiteful, degrading language. we believe that every human being has worth, and we believe life arewant to come here to not criminals. they are people who want to build a better life for themselves and their families, and we had to be finding a way to help them do that here in america, a
that's a america's story. there is something in our dna about these immigrants who have the courage to get up and come here. really to fight against great odds, to succeed you. and thank goodness they did. that's who we are today, and we should celebrate it. we shouldn't apologize for. we had to build on it to make us an even stronger nation into century. thanks, tom your. [applause] >> thank you, dick. thank you. dick, thank you very much for that, and thank you for your great...
103
103
Aug 2, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
it has to do with what is best for america. if we can sit back and watch this unraveling and think you are obstructionists if i can stop the country from unraveling i want to be an obstructionist in stamford people with that is a target on my back for the reelection then put the target their and on the front, too. if i'm going to be held accountable for holding the government accountable, amen. the piece i have this one in vv come morning was the accountability act. if we have people clean their offices and it's all of those wonderful 2.1 million private citizens that serves and work for the government, no pity it was for 1%. the senior executives who reach up to $199,000 a year with a bonus near 230,000. what did we say? let's hold them accountable. but in all the concept told the people you elected to work for you accountable. i would say we are trying to protect the 155 million americans who pay taxes every year to make this country such a great country. thank you for being here. thank you so much. it's good to be with you.
it has to do with what is best for america. if we can sit back and watch this unraveling and think you are obstructionists if i can stop the country from unraveling i want to be an obstructionist in stamford people with that is a target on my back for the reelection then put the target their and on the front, too. if i'm going to be held accountable for holding the government accountable, amen. the piece i have this one in vv come morning was the accountability act. if we have people clean...
92
92
Aug 16, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
we had the same in latin america. people my grated to vens with a lay from countries such as peru on a consistent basis for half a century. it's a wealthier country than venezuela. look at it this way as well. chinese immigration in the united states has played a key role in the growing economic prosperity of china, they have not only of course been able to export stuff and import stuff to them. they invested in china response i think that borders and barriers are really art initial term of the impact on the economy. we all benefit from the constant circulation as people. the same is happening in europe. some of the eastern -- or central european countries have been -- in the last few years. it became legal to do so. and yet they have been becoming more and more prosperous. poland is more prosperous. it export the an incredible amount of people to spain. >> i have some small things to add. he's 100% right. about the german 1848ers. they left behind complained about the liberals leaving. americans who experienced and m
we had the same in latin america. people my grated to vens with a lay from countries such as peru on a consistent basis for half a century. it's a wealthier country than venezuela. look at it this way as well. chinese immigration in the united states has played a key role in the growing economic prosperity of china, they have not only of course been able to export stuff and import stuff to them. they invested in china response i think that borders and barriers are really art initial term of the...
56
56
Aug 30, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
i don't think that is america. so schools can raise prices to capture students who can pay full price. your harvard princeton and yale's will have a huge amount of demand for people who want to go so they can jack up the price as much as they wanted people are going to pay that because that grand is synonymous with achievement in american life. and what has happened is a lot of second-tier schools have followed suit and they also have raised their tuition to exorbitant levels that most people cannot pay. not to make the to make this school the whipping boy of the george washington university is one school that is kind of the exemplary of this. it's the most expensive school in the country but nobody would say it's not the highest quality. but it is capitalizing on the belief that price is anonymous with quality so if you are a parent or student who student who maybe is uninformed about the college process or informed and you see that in me think i send my kid there there will be a great shot at a high level of achi
i don't think that is america. so schools can raise prices to capture students who can pay full price. your harvard princeton and yale's will have a huge amount of demand for people who want to go so they can jack up the price as much as they wanted people are going to pay that because that grand is synonymous with achievement in american life. and what has happened is a lot of second-tier schools have followed suit and they also have raised their tuition to exorbitant levels that most people...
83
83
Aug 30, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
to build businesses in america. so -- [applause] we came together on a bipartisan basis so at the end of the day, some parts i hated. some parts of it i hated. that's how you compromise. we ended up with 54 democratic senators and 14 republican senators giving us 68 votes to past the bill out of the senate. my message, and tom's message to the speaker is give us a chance to do things and come together, both political parties, give the house of representatives a chance to come up with a bipartisan approach. we have one. maybe they have one too. let's get it done. it's time for america to fix this broken immigration system. >> first of all, i want to ask if either edwardo or hector, do you have anything to and? i guess since -- you are under the bill; right? >> yeah, uh-huh. >> this is one guy right here that is under the thing i mentioned, and if that thing -- if that is done away with, as congressman king got that vote in the house, it won't pass the senate, but if it did, would what happen to you? >> i have no idea
to build businesses in america. so -- [applause] we came together on a bipartisan basis so at the end of the day, some parts i hated. some parts of it i hated. that's how you compromise. we ended up with 54 democratic senators and 14 republican senators giving us 68 votes to past the bill out of the senate. my message, and tom's message to the speaker is give us a chance to do things and come together, both political parties, give the house of representatives a chance to come up with a...
89
89
Aug 5, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
america is a messy process. i would encourage everyone to exercise power that senator mccain mentioned. but more than anything, i would encourage those that have a voice in this and have been quiet so far to speak up. i think that's been a difference among conservatives this time, and if we continue that, i see a great hope to get this through the house of representatives signed by the president of the united states. >> you get the last word. >> i guess be uncomfortable. that's part of my message. i think we've gotten too comfortable having the same conversations and not challenging each other. sticking to the corners and sticking to our guns and our bullet points. and so why they give you quite frankly -- i would beg of you quite frankly to reach across the aisle and talk to people. try to kind of unpack this very messy topic because people's lives are at stake. and our futures are at stake and i frankly don't know how long i can keep weeding, you know. >> please think this panel for their contribution. [applau
america is a messy process. i would encourage everyone to exercise power that senator mccain mentioned. but more than anything, i would encourage those that have a voice in this and have been quiet so far to speak up. i think that's been a difference among conservatives this time, and if we continue that, i see a great hope to get this through the house of representatives signed by the president of the united states. >> you get the last word. >> i guess be uncomfortable. that's part...